Myanmarese
President Thein Sein said Monday the country had given up its plan to develop
nuclear programs in cooperation with Russia in the mid-2000s.
He told
visiting Korean President Lee Myung-bak that Russia offered to build two 10
megawatt nuclear reactors for civilian, not military, use.
But the
country’s military junta did not pushed the project due to its inability to
manage it, he was quoted as saying by Lee’s security aide Kim Tae-hyo.
In 2007,
Russia's atomic energy agency and Myanmar signed a deal to build nuclear
research reactor. Reports said reactors would use low enriched uranium
consisting of less than 20 percent uranium-235.
The two leaders
also discussed Myanmar’s alleged military cooperation with Pyongyang.
The
defector, whose identity was withheld, has served his five-year prison term
here for illegal entry into the country since March 2010.
Most
defectors from the repressive state have made their way into South Korea after
crossing the border into China and moving into a third country such as Myanmar,
Laos and Cambodia.
The two
leaders also discussed Myanmar’s alleged military cooperation with Pyongyang.
Thein Sein
said that his country has never cooperated with North Korea in terms of nuclear
programs, and that Myanmar will abide by the U.N. Security Council resolution
1874 banning Pyongyang’s long-range rocket launch.
Lee also
pledged to increase South Korea’s level of assistance to Myanmar and share
South Korea’s development experience. The leaders also agreed to expand
bilateral cooperation in energy, resource development and construction of
infrastructure.
To deepen
the countries’ friendship, the leaders agreed to increase people-to-people
exchanges and cooperation in areas of sports and culture.

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